Felt seismicity associated with shale gas hydraulic fracturing: The first documented example in Europe

Clarke, Huw and Eisner, Leo and Styles, Peter and Turner, Peter (2014) Felt seismicity associated with shale gas hydraulic fracturing: The first documented example in Europe. Geophysical Research Letters, 41 (23). pp. 8308-8314. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GL062047

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1002/2014GL062047

Abstract

We describe the origin of felt seismicity during the hydraulic fracturing of the Carboniferous Bowland Shale at the Preese Hall 1 exploration well near Blackpool in the UK during 2011. The seismicity resulted from the interaction of hydraulic fracturing and a fault, the location of which was unknown at the time but has subsequently been located and does not intersect the well borehole. Waveform cross correlation is used to detect 50 events in the sequence. A representative hypocenter and strike-slip focal mechanism is calculated using the best recorded seismic event. The hypocenter is calculated to lie 300–400m east, and 330–360m below the injection point and shown to lie on a fault imaged using 3-D seismic at a depth of about 2930m. The 3-D survey shows that not only the event hypocenter but also the focal mechanism correlates strongly with a subsequently identi!able transpressional fault formed during the Late Carboniferous (Variscan) basin inversion.

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Item Type: Article
Subjects: Methodology > Method and procesing > Collective properties of seismicity
Methodology > Method and procesing > Technology-seismicity interaction
Region > UK > Lancashire
Inducing technology > Unconventional hydrocarbon extraction
Project: SHEER project > PREESE HALL: Shale Gas
EPOS-IP > PREESE HALL: Shale Gas